CIM - Course Notes - Chapter 2
CIM - Course Notes - Chapter 2
CIM - Course Notes - Chapter 2
=
=
P
j
j f
Q Q
1
2.4.1 Production Quantity and Product Variety
P
1
= Number of distinct product lines produced by the plant
Represents hard product variety
P
2
= Number of models in a product line
Represents soft product variety
The total number of product models is given by
where the subscript j identifies the product line, j = 1, 2, , P
1
.
=
=
1
1
2
P
j
j
P P
Example 2.1
Product Lines and Product Models
A company specializes in home entertainment products. It
produces only TVs and audio systems. In its TV line it offers
15 different models, and in its audio line it offers 5 models.
What is the totality of product models?
Solution
2.4.1 Production Quantity and Product Variety
20 5 15
1
1
2
= + = =
=
P
j
j
P P
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Qualitative and quantitative aspects
Product and part complexity
For assembled products, the more parts, the more
complex the product is.
For manufactured components, a possible measure
of part complexity is the number of processing steps
required to produce the component.
Product complexity n
p
= Number of parts in product
Part complexity n
o
= Number of operations per part
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Typical number of separate components in various assembled products
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Typical number of processing operations required to fabricate various parts
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Production plants distinguished by n
p
and n
o
values
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
The total number of products made annually in a plant is the
sum of the quantities of individual products. The total number
of parts manufactured by the plant per year is
where P is the total number of different part or product styles;
Q
j
is the annual quantity of product style j; n
pj
is the number
of parts in product j.
pj
P
j
j pf
n Q n
=
=
1
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
The total number of processing operations performed by the
plant is
where n
ojk
is the number of processing operations for each
part k, assumed over the number of parts in product j, n
pj
.
The parameter n
of
provides a numerical value for the total
activity level in the plant.
= =
=
pj
n
k
ojk pj
P
j
j of
n n Q n
1 1
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
= =
=
pj
n
k
ojk pj
P
j
j of
n n Q n
1 1
115
3
2
3
3
3
4
3 5
2
5
2
2
2 10 =
|
.
|
\
|
+ + +
|
.
|
\
|
+ =
Product 1 (Quantity = 10) and Product 2 (Quantity = 5)
Product 1 2 parts (Part 1 2 operations, Part 2 5 operations)
Product 2 3 parts (Part 1 4 operations, Part 2 3 operations,
Part 3 2 operations)
operations
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Simplified for purposes of conceptualization:
Assume that the number of products P are in equal quantities Q ,
all products have the same number of components n
p
, and all
components require an equal number of processing steps n
o
.
Total number of product units Q
f
= PQ
Total number of parts produced n
pf
= PQn
p
Total number of operations n
of
= PQn
p
n
o
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Example 2.2
A Production System Problem
Suppose a company has designed a new product line and is planning to build a
new plant to manufacture this product line. The new line consists of 100 different
product styles, and for each product type the company wants to produce 10000
units annually. The products average 1000 components each, and the average
number of processing steps required for each component is 10. All parts will be
made in the plant. Each processing step takes an average of I min. Determine
(a) how many products, (b) how many parts, and (c) how many production
operations will be required each year, and (d) how many workers will be needed
for the plant, if it operates one eight-hour shift for 250 day/yr and one worker
works on one machine?
2.4.2 Product and Part Complexity
Solution
(a) The total number of units to be produced by the plant is
Q = PQ = 100 10000 = 10
6
products annually
(b) The total number of parts produced is
n
pf
= PQn
p
= 10
6
1000 = 10
9
parts annually
(c) The number of distinct production operations is
n
of
= PQn
p
n
o
= 10
9
10 = 10
10
operations
(d) The total time to be used to perform these operations is
H = 10
10
1/60 = 1.67 10
8
hr
If each worker works 2000 hr/yr (250 day/yr 8 hr/yr), then the total
number of workers required is
workers
83333
2000
10 67 . 1
8
=
= w
2.4.3 Limitations and Capabilities of a Manufacturing Plant
Manufacturing capability - Technical and physical
limitations of a manufacturing firm and each of its plants
Three dimensions of manufacturing capability:
1. Technological processing capability - Available set of
manufacturing processes
2. Physical size and weight of product
3. Production capacity (plant capacity) - Production quantity
that can be made in a given time. Plant capacity is often
measured in terms of output units such as annual tons of
steel produced by a steel mill, or number of cars produced
by a final assembly plant.
2.5 LEAN PRODUCTION
Definition: Operating the factory with the minimum possible
resources and yet maximizing the amount of work
accomplished
Resources include workers, equipment, time, space,
materials
Complete products in the minimum possible time and
achieve a very high quality level to completely satisfy the
customer
In short, lean production means doing more with less, and
doing it better.
2.5 LEAN PRODUCTION
Manufacturing activities can be divided into three
categories:
Value-adding activities
Contribute value to the work unit, including processing and assembly
operations that alter the part or product in a way towards the need of the
customer
Auxiliary activities
Support the value-adding activities but do not themselves contribute value
to the part or product
Wasteful activities
Do not add value nor do they support the value adding activities. If not
performed, there would be no adverse effects on the product.
2.5 LEAN PRODUCTION
The programs associated with lean production are
the following:
Just-in-time delivery of parts
Worker involvement
Continuous improvement
Reduced setup times
Stop the process when something is wrong
Error prevention
Total productive maintenance